Housepricegrowth in London and the UK London UK Source : Oxford Economics ... There is wide variation in houseprices across London. Latest DCLG data for 2008Q3 revealed the average houseprice in Kensington & Chelsea exceeded £1.1 million ... 000. At the other end of the scale was Barking & Dagenham where the average houseprice

under the scenario of ‘moderate house-pricegrowth’, the number of households in the intermediate ... Table 5.2 – Projected growth in private rental market based on moderate house-price ... Table 5.2 presents the impact of moderate house-pricegrowth on the sizes of the three segments of the private rental market. Table 5.2 – Projected growth in private rental market based on moderate house-pricegrowth Number of households % of rental

growth is forecast for 2013 and 2014, it will not be until 2015 that UK houseprices ... At a national level, UK houseprices are forecast to grow by a modest 2.5% this year; a significant improvement on 2012 when prices fell -0.9%. The forecast growth

prospects for housing in the U.S. The long-term (2020 and thereafter) rate of growth ...Annualrate of change of house prices1 Percent IHS Global Insight, August 2009 IHS Global Insight, July 2010 Moody’s Analytics, July 2010, portfolio weighted ... conservative houseprice forecast. This year, the actuarial assessments switched from using national houseprice forecasts by IHS Global Insight to local-area forecasts provided

housepricegrowthrates in 2010 in this scenario: similar numbers are produced ... than 50% in the period up to 2020 (representing an annualisedgrowthrate of less ... however, that while the model points towards general growth in average houseprices

Table 83: Houseprice forecast, cumulative housepricegrowth North West Yorkshir e North UK Source: Knight Frank Residential Research As Central Lancashire and the constituent districts have tracked the previous North West trends in the past, we would ... Table 83 provides our price forecast in cumulative terms, the shaded cells point to the period when prices are forecast to return to their 2007 peak, a process which, on average and including the North West, will be complete by 2015.